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Graham Robb

    Graham Robb è uno scrittore britannico celebrato per le sue approfondite esplorazioni della storia e della cultura, in particolare della Francia. Il suo lavoro è caratterizzato da una profonda comprensione delle forze sociali e culturali che hanno plasmato le società, e spesso unisce una ricerca meticolosa a una narrazione vivida. Robb si concentra sullo svelare il tessuto della vita quotidiana e gli aspetti spesso trascurati del passato, offrendo ai lettori una prospettiva fresca e illuminante sui periodi storici e sulle persone che li hanno abitati.

    Victor Hugo
    Balzac
    Strangers: Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century
    Strangers
    Rimbaud
    Cols and Passes of the British Isles
    • 2022
    • 2018

      The Debatable Land

      • 416pagine
      • 15 ore di lettura

      Sunday Times top-ten bestselling author Graham Robb turns his attention on his homeland for the first time in this beautifully written and ground-breaking book.

      The Debatable Land
    • 2016

      A col is the lowest point on the saddle between two mountains. Graham Robb has spent years uncovering and cataloguing the 2,002 cols and 105 passes scattered across the British Isles. Some of these obscure and magical sites are virgin cols that have never been crossed. Dozens were lost by the Ordnance Survey and are recorded only in ballads or monastic charters. The eleven cols of Hadrian's Wall are practically unknown and have never been properly identified. These underappreciated slices of natural beauty provide a new way of looking at British history, and a challenge for cyclists and walkers.

      Cols and Passes of the British Isles
    • 2013
    • 2013
    • 2010
    • 2007

      From maps, migration and magic, to linguistic differences and tribal disputes, The Discovery of France tells the whole story of this remarkable - and surprising - country.

      The discovery of France
    • 2005

      Strangers

      • 341pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      A fresh examination of the development of homosexual culture during the nineteenth century in Europe and America describes the lives of gay men and women, how they discovered their sexuality, how they made contact with like- minded people, the relationship of gay culture to religion, and how homosexuals were treated by society. Reprint.

      Strangers
    • 2004
    • 2000

      Rimbaud

      • 416pagine
      • 15 ore di lettura

      "Unknown beyond the avant-garde at the time of his death, Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891) has been one of the most destructive and liberating influences on twentieth-century culture. He was the first poet to devise a scientifically plausible method for changing the nature of existence, the first to live a homosexual adventure as a model for social change, and the first to repudiate the myths on which his reputation still depends. Rimbaud's abandonment of poetry in his early twenties has caused more lasting, widespread consternation than the break-up of the Beatles. Even in the mid-1880s, when the French Decadents were hailing him as a 'Messiah', he was already several reincarnations from his starting point." "Robb's Rimbaud is a biographical journey through three continents and many different identities: the Bohemian poet in Victorian London, the mercenary in Java, the gunrunner and explorer in East Africa. By allowing the boy poet to grow up, Robb casts his later years in an entirely new light."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

      Rimbaud